7 research outputs found

    Parallelization and improvement of beamforming process in synthetic aperture systems for real-time ultrasonic image generation

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    Tesis inédita de la Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Facultad de Informática, Departamento de Arquitectura de Computadores y Automática, leída el 9-02-2016La ecografía es hoy en día uno de los métodos de visualización más populares para examinar el interior de cuerpos opacos. Su aplicación es especialmente significativa tanto en el campo del diagnóstico médico como en las aplicaciones de evaluación no destructiva en el ámbito industrial, donde se evalúa la integridad de un componente o una estructura. El desarrollo de sistemas ecográficos de alta calidad y con buenas prestaciones se basa en el empleo de sistemas multisensoriales conocidos como arrays que pueden estar compuestos por varias decenas de elementos. El desarrollo de estos dispositivos tiene asociada una elevada complejidad, tanto por el número de sensores y la electrónica necesaria para la adquisición paralela de señales, como por la etapa de procesamiento de los datos adquiridos que debe operar en tiempo real. Esta etapa de procesamiento de señal trabaja con un elevado flujo de datos en paralelo y desarrolla, además de la composición de imagen, otras sofisticadas técnicas de medidas sobre los datos (medida de elasticidad, flujo, etc). En este sentido, el desarrollo de nuevos sistemas de imagen con mayores prestaciones (resolución, rango dinámico, imagen 3D, etc) está fuertemente limitado por el número de canales en la apertura del array. Mientras algunos estudios se han centrado en la reducción activa de sensores (sparse arrays como ejemplo), otros se han centrado en analizar diferentes estrategias de adquisiciónn que, operando con un número reducido de canales electrónicos en paralelo, sean capaz por multiplexación emular el funcionamiento de una apertura plena. A estas últimas técnicas se las agrupa mediante el concepto de Técnicas de Apertura Sintética (SAFT). Su interés radica en que no solo son capaces de reducir los requerimientos hardware del sistema (bajo consumo, portabilidad, coste, etc) sino que además permiten dentro de cierto compromiso la mejora de la calidad de imagen respecto a los sistemas convencionales...Ultrasound is nowadays one of the most popular visualization methods to examine the interior of opaque objects. Its application is particularly significant in the field of medical diagnosis as well as non-destructive evaluation applications in industry. The development of high performance ultrasound imaging systems is based on the use of multisensory systems known as arrays, which may be composed by dozens of elements. The development of these devices has associated a high complexity, due to the number of sensors and electronics needed for the parallel acquisition of signals, and for the processing stage of the acquired data which must operate on real-time. This signal processing stage works with a high data flow in parallel and develops, besides the image composition, other sophisticated measure techniques (measure of elasticity, flow, etc). In this sense, the development of new imaging systems with higher performance (resolution, dynamic range, 3D imaging, etc) is strongly limited by the number of channels in array’s aperture. While some studies have been focused on the reduction of active sensors (i.e. sparse arrays), others have been centered on analysing different acquisition strategies which, operating with reduced number of electronic channels in parallel, are able to emulate by multiplexing the behavior of a full aperture. These latest techniques are grouped under the term known as Synthetic Aperture Techniques (SAFT). Their interest is that they are able to reduce hardware requirements (low power, portability, cost, etc) and also allow to improve the image quality over conventional systems...Depto. de Arquitectura de Computadores y AutomáticaFac. de InformáticaTRUEunpu

    Advancements and Breakthroughs in Ultrasound Imaging

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    Ultrasonic imaging is a powerful diagnostic tool available to medical practitioners, engineers and researchers today. Due to the relative safety, and the non-invasive nature, ultrasonic imaging has become one of the most rapidly advancing technologies. These rapid advances are directly related to the parallel advancements in electronics, computing, and transducer technology together with sophisticated signal processing techniques. This book focuses on state of the art developments in ultrasonic imaging applications and underlying technologies presented by leading practitioners and researchers from many parts of the world

    Synthetic aperture tissue and flow ultrasound imaging

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    Beyond the spatio-temporal limits of atmospheric radars: inverse problem techniques and MIMO systems

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    The Earth’s upper atmosphere (UA) is a highly dynamic region dominated by atmospheric waves and stratified turbulence covering a wide range of spatio-temporal scales. A comprehensive study of the UA requires measurements over a broad range of frequencies and spatial wavelengths, which are prohibitively costly. To improve the understanding of the UA, an investment in efficient and large observational infrastructures is required. This work investigates remote sensing techniques based on MIMO and inverse problems techniques to improve the capabilities of current atmospheric radars

    Sensor Signal and Information Processing II

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    In the current age of information explosion, newly invented technological sensors and software are now tightly integrated with our everyday lives. Many sensor processing algorithms have incorporated some forms of computational intelligence as part of their core framework in problem solving. These algorithms have the capacity to generalize and discover knowledge for themselves and learn new information whenever unseen data are captured. The primary aim of sensor processing is to develop techniques to interpret, understand, and act on information contained in the data. The interest of this book is in developing intelligent signal processing in order to pave the way for smart sensors. This involves mathematical advancement of nonlinear signal processing theory and its applications that extend far beyond traditional techniques. It bridges the boundary between theory and application, developing novel theoretically inspired methodologies targeting both longstanding and emergent signal processing applications. The topic ranges from phishing detection to integration of terrestrial laser scanning, and from fault diagnosis to bio-inspiring filtering. The book will appeal to established practitioners, along with researchers and students in the emerging field of smart sensors processing

    Application of Golay codes to improve SNR in coarray based synthetic aperture imaging systems

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    Minimum redundancy synthetic aperture solutions (based on the coarray concept) are usually limited by poor signal to noise ratio. The use of pulse coding based on Golay codes can help in order to improve the signal to noise-ratio. Two solutions (2R-SAFT and 4R-SAFT) for data reduction in the beamforming process of multi-element synthetic aperture imaging are used here to reduce the system’s architecture, cost and requisites. Alongside with the application of Golay codes it is experimentally demonstrated the improvement of the dynamic range and SNR, achieving an image quality comparable to the Total Focusing Method and establishing its use for suitable real-time medical applications.This work has been supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness under the project DPI2010-19376 and the grant BES-2008-008675
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